Working in collaboration with Cuc Phuong National Park, this project began with detailed planning and activity site selection. Araceae plants were collected and planted across more than 500 m², while two educational models – an animal footprint trail featuring seven species and a wind-based seed dispersal display – were created, installed, and handed over to the park.
To support environmental learning, a field trip was organised for 30 students and three teachers from a nearby school, giving them hands-on experience with the new models. A summary billboard was also installed to explain the experiments and their conservation purpose.

We supported our partners in the Sri Lankan highlands to deliver a series of awareness programmes across villages in the Kandy and Nuwara Eliya districts, helping communities understand how to safely and confidently co-exist with leopards.
The Sri Lanka leopard – an endangered subspecies with an estimated population of around 750 – lives within the country’s highland regions. Their territories often overlap with rural villages and estate lands. While leopards are not a threat to human life, they do pose a significant risk to livestock and pets.
By strengthening community education, refreshing awareness boards, and enhancing conservation infrastructure within Sri Lanka’s Department of Wildlife Conservation, the project aims to eliminate human-caused leopard deaths by 2025.

The devastating impact of the global pandemic resulted in a drastic decrease in tourism along the Mekong and Ou Rivers in Laos, which in turn has affected the livelihood of communities in the surrounding areas near Luang Prabang. Many families are now struggling to provide the basic essentials and school uniforms their children need for school.
To help support these families and children in need, Exodus Tour Leader and Co-Founder of Baraka Community Partnerships, Andy McKee, is looking to send essential hygiene and education packages (of soap, toothpaste, toothbrushes, notebook, pen, pencil, ruler) to 500 primary school children, along with 50 school uniforms. Working closely with Andy McKee, we’re helping to raise money through the Community Kickstart Project so that these packages and uniforms are sent directly to their families, enabling 500 children to get back to school and continue their studies. These packages and uniforms will be delivered by Baraka’s long-term Laotian NGO partners for almost 10 years, Community Learning International (CLI). One of CLI’s ongoing charitable projects is their “Book Boat” initiative which helps to take over 1,000 Laos books to more than 100 riverside villages along the Mekong River for children in remote communities to read. With their vast experience in the area around Luang Prabang, they are the ideal partners to assist the distribution of these essential packages to 500 school children.
Close to Mount Kinabalu, a World Heritage Site, you’ll find the Pekan Nabalu community. To support the recovery of tourism in the region, our local Exodus operator has been working with the local community to create a new tourist attraction in the form of a waterfall, local walking trails and natural swimming pools for travellers to enjoy. The Community Kickstart Project will fund the building of another shorter and more accessible jungle trekking trail to ensure this beautiful community built landmark can easily and safely be enjoyed by all.
When Malaysia was placed on a strict Movement Control Order in response to the pandemic, interstate movement was limited. This affected many locals economically and caused their food supply to be badly disrupted.
In response local Exodus leader, Wye Wong, worked alongside the local community to build a community garden with a mission to enable a more sustainable lifestyle for the 360 households living in this community. Wye worked with the local people to install a rainwater harvesting system to capture enough water before the dry season began – ensuring the gardens continued to support the local residents.
Bukit Lawang, North Sumatra, is one of two places in the world where wild orangutans can still be seen, along with a myriad of other species native to Gunung Leuser National Park. In order to protect this rich area of biodiversity, our local tour leaders involved the community in crafting eco-bricks, made from waste collected around the local area, in order to help build a local education café. The café, in turn, will not only help to bring further tourist income to the area, but it will also become a venue for an organic vegetable garden and all kinds of community activity, such as traditional dance, cooking classes, environmental education and English lessons.
Before travel was paused in 2020 during the pandemic, our core team of National Park jeep drivers played a key role in creating unforgettable experiences for Exodus travellers, by transporting them around the spectacular Yala National Park in Sri Lanka. Our operator team wanted to support our drivers and their families in their difficult time of need, so we provided funding so they could have a month’s worth of food, sanitary and medical rations for seven families.

